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Crime Labs in Crisis: Shoddy Forensics Used to Secure Convictions
Loaded on Oct. 15, 2010
by Matthew Clarke
published in Prison Legal News
October, 2010, page 1
Filed under:
Contractor Misconduct,
Police Misconduct,
Government Misconduct,
Malicious Prosecution,
Evidence,
DNA Testing/Samples,
Mechanical Searches/Scanners,
Crime,
Statistics/Trends,
Databases,
Conspiracy,
Staffing,
Jury Instructions,
Expert Witnesses,
Sentencing,
Wrongful Conviction,
Failure to Train/Supervise.
Locations:
United Kingdom,
India,
United States of America.
To millions of people whose knowledge of crime labs comes from television shows such as CSI, Bones, Crossing Jordan and the venerable Quincy M.E., the forensic experts who work at such labs seem to be infallible scientists who use validated scientific techniques to follow the evidence to the truth, regardless ...
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More from this issue:
- Crime Labs in Crisis: Shoddy Forensics Used to Secure Convictions, by Matthew Clarke
- Prisoners of the Census in New York: Democracy on the March!, by Eric Lotke
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- New York Prisons Avoid Budget Axe, by David Reutter
- Are Doctors Complicit in Prison Torture? The Maine Medical Community Looks at Solitary Confinement, by Lance Tapley
- State Auditor Issues Report on Washington Department of Corrections
- $13 Million Settlement in DC Mass Arrest of Protestors, by David Reutter
- Settlement Allows North Carolina Prisoners to Receive Compensation for Writings, by David Reutter
- Expanded Eligibility for New York Medical Parole Has Little Effect, by Matthew Clarke
- Ex-Cons Face Tougher Job Market in Great Recession, by David Reutter
- Governing Through Crime: How the War on Crime Transformed American Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear, by Jonathan Simon (Oxford University Press 2007), 344 pages, by Ian Head
- New York Prison Chaplain Accused of Smuggling Weapons
- Prisoners’ Self-Help Litigation Manual, 4th Edition, by John Boston and Daniel Manville, Oxford University Press, 960 Pages, $39.95, by Paul Wright
- Former President of Florida Sheriff’s Association Enters Plea in Kickback Scheme, by David Reutter
- $3.125 Million in Settlements in Oregon Prisoner’s Beating Death
- Tennessee Judge Facing Misconduct Charges Tries to Depose Disciplinary Counsel, by Matthew Clarke
- Pennsylvania Prisoner Awarded $185,000 in Civil Rights Claim; Harassment Continues, by David Reutter
- Ninth Circuit Says Qualified Immunity Warranted for Comb-Binding Denial, by Mark Wilson
- Washington Prisoners Need Not Show Prima Facie Case Upon Challenging Prison Discipline, by David Reutter
- Virginia Issues Report on Monitoring of Sex Offenders Subject to Registration
- Georgia Ends Contact Visits for Death Row Prisoners, by David Reutter
- Texas Controversy: Governor Guts Forensic Science Commission, by Matthew Clarke
- For Lease: Never-Used 525-Bed Oregon Jail, $45 Million or Best Offer, by Mark Wilson
- Seventh Circuit Upholds Ban on Dungeons & Dragons, by Brandon Sample
- New York Prison Superintendents Live in Lap of Luxury on Taxpayer Subsidy
- Third Circuit Reverses $642,398.57 Attorney Fee Award for RFRA Claim by Immigration Prisoner
- U.S. Supreme Court: No Bivens Remedy Available Against PHS Staff, by Brandon Sample
- Fraudsters Sentenced in Cornell Prison Construction Scheme, by Brandon Sample
- Successful Appellate Ruling Invalidating Statute Creates Prevailing Party for Attorney Fee Award, by David Reutter
- Exhaustion Excused Where Warden Misled Prisoner During Grievance Process, by Brandon Sample
- Ninth Circuit: Los Angeles County Not Liable for Occasional Over-Detentions, by Michael Brodheim
- Female Assistant Attorney General Pleads Guilty in Wife-Beating Case, by Mark Wilson
- Sexual Abuse of Youths at Tennessee Juvenile Facility Widespread, by David Reutter
- Fake Rape Claim Puts Woman in Prison, by Brandon Sample
- News in Brief:
- Limitations Period in Suit Over Delay in Providing Surgery Begins When Prisoner is Recommended for Surgery, by Brandon Sample
More from Matthew Clarke:
- Kansas Supreme Court Revives Prisoner’s Challenge to Loss of Parental Rights, June 6, 2025
- $5.6 Million Settlement for California Prisoner’s Wife Strip-searched During Visit, June 1, 2025
- Academic Study of Prison Guards’ Use of Excessive Force Details Sad State of Civil Rights for Abused Prisoners, June 1, 2025
- Multitudes Caged for Failure to Pay Child Support, Driving Mass Incarceration, May 1, 2025
- Los Angeles County Pays $24 Million to Two Former Prisoners Wrongly Convicted as Teens of 1997 Murder, May 1, 2025
- Federal Watchdog Calls Out BOP for Spiking Suicide Risk at Pennsylvania Lockup, April 1, 2025
- Eighth Circuit: Arkansas Prisoner Who Had Consensual Sex With Guard Cannot Sustain Eighth Amendment Claim, April 1, 2025
- TDCJ to Run Out of Beds in 2025, April 1, 2025
- “Happy Mother’s Day”: $1,353,000 Settlement Approved for Migrant Parents Separated from Minor Kids at Border, March 1, 2025
- DOJ Finds “Horrific and Inhumane” Conditions in Georgia Prisons, March 1, 2025
More from these topics:
- $7.75 Million Settlement for Exonerated North Carolina Prisoner, June 1, 2025. Wrongful Conviction, Wrongful Imprisonment.
- $13 Million Awarded to Exonerated Massachusetts Prisoner for Wrongful Conviction, June 1, 2025. Wrongful Conviction, Wrongful Imprisonment.
- Government Quasi-Agency Attempts to Infiltrate Criminal Justice Nonprofit, June 1, 2025. Government Misconduct.
- Over $1.1 Million Recovered for Rikers Island Janitors, June 1, 2025. Contractor Misconduct.
- Georgia Moves to Shield Intellectually Disabled Prisoners from Execution, June 1, 2025. Sentencing, Death Penalty.
- New York Lifts Hiring Ban on Fired Striking Prison Guards, Announces Early Prisoner Releases, May 1, 2025. Work Strikes, Staffing, Parole, Guard Unions, Bail/Pretrial Release, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release.
- Oregon DOC Replaces Top Medical Staffers Amid Turmoil, May 1, 2025. Systemic Medical Neglect, Staffing.
- Kansas Supreme Court Denies Compensation to Former Prisoner Whose Conviction Was Overturned, May 1, 2025. Wrongful Conviction, Damages - Compensatory.
- New Orleans Public Defender’s “Redeem Team” Says: “Re-entry Is Never Over”, May 1, 2025. Settlements, Wrongful Conviction, Life without Parole (LWOP), Juveniles, Post-release, ex-offender, re-entry, Remands/Rehearings/Resentencings.
- Texas Courts, Legislature at Odds over Executing Potentially Innocent Death Row Prisoner, May 1, 2025. Wrongful Conviction, Death Penalty/Death Row, Actual Innocence/Claim of Innocence, Opposition to the Death Penalty, Lethal Injection Method of Execution.